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Client Brief and Design Intent
The intent of the building was to combine
with the historic Teachers College Building to create a Faculty of
Education Precinct with its own identifiable character - to build a piece
of "medieval city" within the University campus; dense, informal
yet correct in its geometry - responding to the historic accidents that
created the site boundaries.

On each boundary, relationships with
adjoining buildings and urban spaces had to be resolved. To the north, the
building had to complete the sweep of Manning Road. To the
south it had to complete the Square and respond to the long low form of
Wilkinson's 1924 Physics Building.

To the
east the new building had to connect to the existing Student Union
Building at both ground and upper levels, whilst its roof had to become
part of the general skyscape of steep roofs and gables.
To the
west it had to define and bridge the Wilkinson
axis, and to relate to and connect with the historic Teachers College
Building which forms the other side of the axis.

The architectural
vocabulary chosen was clearly a response to the Teachers College Building,
but also complements Wilkinson's Physics Building located across the
Square and the historic gabled skyline to the east.
Brick
was chosen as a cladding to meet the University's maintenance requirements
as well as for its thermal and acoustic performance. Window openings were
kept to a modest size for the same reason.
Horizontal
brick banding was used as an instrument for definition of floor lines,
openings and natural ground lines.
Interest was added with the use of bays,
indents, brightly tiled frieze patterns, heavy cornice, a convex facade
onto the Manning Road, entry portico with capitals, and soldier courses
around window frames. The glazed
tile chess board motif of the
gables surrounded by stretcher courses reflects similar motifs on the
campus.


The building received the 1994 John Horbury
Hunt Award for Excellence in Brickwork.
Description
The building is of conventional reinforced
concrete frame clad in single leaf brickwork with steel stud framing clad
in plasterboard. Copings and other mouldings are pre cast concrete. Most
of the building is naturally ventilated, with air conditioned lecture
theatres.
The building was originally designed to be
rendered and painted Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC), however the
University found that the higher initial cost of the face brickwork was
offset by its lower maintenance cost.
The architects were commissioned to design,
document and administer the contract. The University's Facilities
Management office was the project manager. The building contract was a
guaranteed maximum price lump sum, in effect a "partnering"
agreement.
Brickwork
Over
2 500 000 bricks were needed from four manufacturers. Four special
bricks were made for the job, including square bricks for the corners of
window surrounds to allow the patterning to go around the end of the
lintels. The gable tiling was part of the bricklaying contract.
Excessive
water jet pressure during brick cleaning eroded the
tooled faces of some joints and some areas of brickwork.


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